M T Downing1, D P Way, D A Caniano. 1. Department of Surgery, Ohio State University College of Medicine and Children's Hospital, Columbus 43205, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medical ethics is a required part of the curriculum in all medical schools in the United States, and an essential component of the educational guidelines for most postgraduate residency programs. Currently, general surgery does not specify ethics education in its essential curriculum for surgical training. This study was designed to determine the existing educational activities in ethics for residents in general surgery, as well as to characterize the attitudes of surgical educators about the role of ethics teaching in residency training. METHODS: An 80-item questionnaire was mailed to the program directors of all accredited general surgery residencies in the United States. They were requested to provide information about their teaching activities in ethics, their resources for ethics instruction, and their attitudes about the importance of education in clinical ethics for surgical residents. RESULTS: The survey had a 71% response rate with a representative distribution of programs based on size, geographic location, and community versus university affiliation. Fifty-six programs (28%) offered no formal ethics education, 94 (48%) held one teaching event in ethics, and 48 (24%) conducted two or more activities. The format for instruction in ethics included grand rounds (50%), resident conferences (41%), and ethics rounds (9%). Residencies with a faculty surgeon having expertise or special interest in ethics had a greater number of ethics teaching activities (P <0.05), whereas programs with a hospital ethicist were more likely to provide ethics rounds (P <0.01). A standardized curriculum in ethics was favored by 85% of respondents with critical content in end-of-life decisions, managing ethical conflict, and informed consent. The majority of program directors were opposed to (50%) or undecided (20%) about inclusion of ethics questions on the American Board of Surgery Inservice Training Examination (ABSITE) and Qualifying Examination in General Surgery. CONCLUSIONS: The majority of program directors of general surgery residencies support the teaching of clinical ethics and favor a standardized curriculum. However, most residencies in general surgery do not include ethics instruction as part of their on-going, regular educational schedule.
BACKGROUND: Medical ethics is a required part of the curriculum in all medical schools in the United States, and an essential component of the educational guidelines for most postgraduate residency programs. Currently, general surgery does not specify ethics education in its essential curriculum for surgical training. This study was designed to determine the existing educational activities in ethics for residents in general surgery, as well as to characterize the attitudes of surgical educators about the role of ethics teaching in residency training. METHODS: An 80-item questionnaire was mailed to the program directors of all accredited general surgery residencies in the United States. They were requested to provide information about their teaching activities in ethics, their resources for ethics instruction, and their attitudes about the importance of education in clinical ethics for surgical residents. RESULTS: The survey had a 71% response rate with a representative distribution of programs based on size, geographic location, and community versus university affiliation. Fifty-six programs (28%) offered no formal ethics education, 94 (48%) held one teaching event in ethics, and 48 (24%) conducted two or more activities. The format for instruction in ethics included grand rounds (50%), resident conferences (41%), and ethics rounds (9%). Residencies with a faculty surgeon having expertise or special interest in ethics had a greater number of ethics teaching activities (P <0.05), whereas programs with a hospital ethicist were more likely to provide ethics rounds (P <0.01). A standardized curriculum in ethics was favored by 85% of respondents with critical content in end-of-life decisions, managing ethical conflict, and informed consent. The majority of program directors were opposed to (50%) or undecided (20%) about inclusion of ethics questions on the American Board of Surgery Inservice Training Examination (ABSITE) and Qualifying Examination in General Surgery. CONCLUSIONS: The majority of program directors of general surgery residencies support the teaching of clinical ethics and favor a standardized curriculum. However, most residencies in general surgery do not include ethics instruction as part of their on-going, regular educational schedule.
Keywords:
Bioethics and Professional Ethics; Empirical Approach
Authors: Matthew P Schlumbrecht; Colleen M Gallagher; Charlotte C Sun; Lois M Ramondetta; Diane C Bodurka Journal: J Cancer Educ Date: 2011-03 Impact factor: 2.037